Faces/places/scholarships

* Jennifer Lynn Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David G. Williams of Newport News, will perform in the fall dance concert at Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, in November.

A 1989 graduate of Ferguson High School, Williams is a freshman at the college. In addition to being a member of the Mary Washington College Dance Company, she is on the yearbook staff, is a member of the Admissions Club and Circle K, and is a regional scholar.

The fall dance concert will include choreography and a solo appearance by Rodger Belman, a graduate of George Mason University Fairfax, and a member of Laura Dean Dancers and Musicians of New York City. His dances are entitled "Extended Ritual" and "Offering."

Other dances on the program will include "Grandma's Attic," choreographed by Mary Washington faculty member Jean Graham Hunt, and "War Dance," choreographed by Assistant Professor Cathy Paine. "Hands Off," will be choreographed by senior performing art major Kristi Spessard.

Williams will perform with the company in "Grandma's Attic."

Performances will be Nov. 3 and 4 in Dodd Auditorium, George Washington Hall at 8:15 p.m. Advance tickets are $4 each and are available through the college's box office (703) 899-4330.

* Allyson Bouteiller of Newport News, was recently chosen as homecoming representative at Methodist College, Fayetteville, N.C. She was sponsored by the Cheerleader's Gold Team.

* Terrence Dereill Finney, a graduate of Denbigh High School, has been elected cafeteria representative of West Hall, a housing facility for 216 men at Chowan College in Murfreesboro, N.C.

Finney, son of Nancy Boone, of Newport News, is studying in the pre-law curriculum.

PLACES

* Alumni and friends of The College of William and Mary will celebrate homecoming Nov. 2-5 with festivities planned by the Society of the Alumni around the theme, "The Best of Times."

Reunion events will continue throughout the weekend for the classes of 1944, 1949, 1954, 1959, 1964, 1969, 1974, 1979 and 1984.

The 60th annual homecoming parade will begin at 9:30 a.m. Nov. 4 at the Capitol Building on the Duke of Gloucester Street and proceed on Richmond Road to Cary Field.

Howard M. Scammon, professor of theater and speech emeritus and a 1934 graduate of the college, will be grand marshal.

At 1 p.m. Nov. 4, the William and Mary Tribe will kick off its homecoming game against the Buccaneers of East Tennessee State University at Cary Field. Following the game, all alumni, family members and friends are invited to attend a "tentgater" party on the south lawn of the Alumni House. Admission fee will be $5 per person.

Additional activities include the Society of the Alumni's annual meeting Friday and the society's annual dinner and dance. Schedules of all events will be available in the registration tent on the front lawn from 3 to 6 p.m. Thursday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 8 a.m. to noon on Sunday. For more information, call 253-4302.

* James W. Brinkley and Raymond A. Mason of Baltimore have designated $100,000 to The College of William and Mary to establish an endowed professorship in the School of Business Administration.

The endowment established by the two William and Mary alumni represents a portion of their overall commitment to The Campaign for the Fourth Century, the college's $150 million comprehensive campaign.

Income from the Brinkley-Mason Endowment will qualify for matching funds under Virginia's Eminent Scholars Program.

* Christopher Newport Collegerecently announced the dedication of the F. Hunter Creech Computer Laboratory. This university-level facility is for the use of the college's department of Applied Physics and Computer Science.

Designed for the use of undergraduates and for faculty research in connection with grants from CEBAF, NASA, the National Science Foundation and the State Council of Higher Education, the laboratory was established in memory of F. Hunter Creech by combined funds from Newport News Shipbuilding and CNC.

Hunter Creech, a vice-president of the shipyard from 1974 until his death in 1983, served on the college's advisory council and was a member of the CNC's board of visitors.

The 1200-square-foot Creech lab holds 10 Sun color workstations and six Sun 386i machines as its central focus, and includes a large number of personal computers, a color printer and a large color plotter.

SCHOLASHIPS

* John E. Perry of Newport News, has been awarded a freshman academic scholarship by Marymount University, a coeducational, independent institution located in Arlington.

Marymount enrolls 1,900 students in undergraduate programs and 1,100 students in graduate programs. Students come to Marymount from 37 states and 33 foreign countries.